Man with the Moneybag and Flatterers Pieter Brueghel the Younger (Brussels 1564/65 1637/38 Antwerp) ca. 1592 oil on panel 16.7 x 16.9 cm signed in dark paint, lower right:.p. BRVEGHEL. PB-101
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Page 3 of 8 This delightfully amusing painting, previously unpublished, depicts an old Comparative Figures Flemish proverb that wealthy men will always have flatterers: Because so much money creeps into my sack, the whole world climbs into my hole. [1] This saying recalls modern day descriptions of flatterers as brownnosers or ass-kissers, terms that no doubt descend from the vivid pictorial tradition of illustrations such as this. Here, Pieter Brueghel the Younger depicts a disproportionately large man holding a sack of coins that pours out from under his arm. Nude from the waist down, he squats near a tree as though defecating. In the foreground, a number of smaller figures crawl behind him and enter into the cavernous opening of his rear end. With irony Fig 1. Infrared photograph of PB-101 showing a detail of the underdrawing (photo: Annette Rupprecht) and wit, Brueghel indicates that not even the spiritually elevated are spared from this universal tendency to brownnose, as a man from a religious order, probably a Franciscan to judge from his brown cloak and hood, eagerly crawls into the man s hole. This painting is in excellent condition, with only a few retouchings from prior restorations.[2] Quickly executed in loose, wet paint, the translucency of the multiple paint layers allows one to appreciate the artist s assured handling. The contours and folds of fabrics in highlighted areas of the man s red shirt and in the dress of the crawling figures are slightly raised because of the paint s impasto. As is characteristic of Pieter Brueghel the Younger s manner of painting, the artist sketched the composition directly on the ground and faithfully followed his preparatory drawing in the final composition (fig 1).[3] Fig 2. Pieter Brueghel the Younger, A Proverb: He who holds the sack of gold will always have flatterers, oil on panel, 18.2 cm diameter, whereabouts unknown (formerly, sale, Sotheby s, London, 12 July 2001, no. 118) A closely related but unsigned version, which includes an inscription of the proverb on its original frame as well as the painting s date, 1592, differs in quality as well as in compositional details (fig 2).[4] For example, it lacks the branches that extend above the main figure in the Leiden Collection painting, and has a simplified landscape at the right. The rudimentary forms of the crawling foreground figures and the unconvincing threedimensionality of the central figure suggest that this work was painted in Pieter Brueghel the Younger s workshop and not by the master.[5] Pieter Brueghel the Younger based his composition on a print by Hieronymous Wiericx (1553 1619), Man with the Moneybag and Fig 3. Hieronymus Wiericx, Man with the Moneybag and His Flatterers, ca. 1558, engraving, 17.8 cm diameter, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford Flatterers (fig 3), which belongs to a print series, Twelve Proverbs.[6] The engraving has two inscriptions, one in Dutch that circles the image and another in French which appears on the squatting man s lower back. Together, they elaborate on the dual nature of flattery. The Dutch text
Page 4 of 8 addresses the great advantage of rich men who use their wealth to get ahead yet lose sight of their own inclination to crawl into the hole. The French text speaks of the desire to enter the hole of the rich person who is willing to give.[7] Despite the close correlation between the Leiden Collection painting and Wiericx s print, Brueghel did make subtle adjustments to his composition. Instead of depicting the man s left hand distributing coins, he eliminated the hand and depicted the coins as streaming out of the moneybag. He also altered the shape of the bottom of the moneybag, and added a house and tree to the distant landscape. The designs for Wiericx s engraved series Twelve Proverbs have sometimes been incorrectly attributed to Pieter Brueghel the Younger s father, Pieter Bruegel the Elder (ca. 1525 69), since the latter s Twelve Fig 4. Jan Theodor de Bry, after Hieronymus Wiericx, Man with the Money Bag and His Flatterers, engraving, 10.7 x 8.4 cm, National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C. Flemish Proverbs in the Museum Mayer van den Bergh in Antwerp are closely related in concept.[8] Nevertheless, Wiericx s proverbs belong to a different pictorial tradition. As is evident in Pieter Brueghel the Younger s paintings, Wiericx s print of the flatterer was very popular. It is also seen in a print by Jan Theodor de Bry (1528 96) executed late in the sixteenth century (fig 4).[9] Such examples, and the different series of proverbs that survive from the period, underscore the popularity of a genre that humorously mocks human behavior. - Dominique Surh 2017
Page 5 of 8 Endnotes 1. Om dat door mynen sack veel gelts comt geslopen daer om worde ick van al de weerelt int gat ghecropen. The proverb is derived from text that survives on the frame of the only other known version of this composition: Om dat door mynen sack veel gelts comt geslopen daer om worde ick van al de weerelt int gat ghecropen 1592 (Because a lot of money creeps into my money bag, the whole world climbs into my hole 1592). Trans. Ilona van Tuinen. See also note 4, this entry. 2. The painting was last cleaned by Nancy Krieg in 2009. 3. Christina Currie and Dominique Allart, The Brueg(h)el Phenomenon: Paintings by Pieter Bruegel the Elder and Pieter Brueghel the Younger, with a Special Focus on Technique and Copying Practice, 3 vols. (Brussels, 2012). Currie and Allart s study of the painting technique of Pieter Brueghel the Younger has shed light on how the artist went about making numerous copies of the same composition, frequently working on the basis of graphic designs and often creating his paintings from drawings or prints. An underdrawing was found at 780 nm; see Annette Rupprecht, Technical notes of A Proverb: He who holds the sack of gold will always have flatterers by Pieter Brueghel the Younger, PB-101 unpublished report dated January 2013, curatorial files, The Leiden Collection, New York. 4. This version is larger in diameter than the present painting by 2 centimeters and its current whereabouts are unknown. The provenance stretches back to 1934, and the work most recently appeared at auction in 2001. For its historical assessment, see Gustav Glück, Brueghels Gemälde (Vienna, 1932), fig. 98; Georges Marlier, Pierre Brueghel Le Jeune, posthumously edited and annotated by Jacqueline Folie (Brussels, 1969), 150, no. 7; and Klaus Ertz, Pieter Brueghel der Jüngere, die Gemälde mit kritischem Oeuvrekatalog (Freren, 1988/2000), 113 14, ft. 58, F 69, 199. 5. Christina Currie and Dominique Allart, The Brueg(h)el Phenomenon: Paintings by Pieter Bruegel the Elder and Pieter Brueghel the Younger, with a Special Focus on Technique and Copying Practice, 3 vols. (Brussels, 2012). 6. The engraving by Heironymous Wiericx is attributed alternatively to Johannes or Jan Wiericx, see F. W. H. Hollstein, Dutch and Flemish Etchings, Engravings and Woodcuts, ca. 1450 1700, vol. 3, Boekhorst Brueghel (Amsterdam, 1955), no. 169; René van Bastelaer, The Prints of Peter Bruegel the Elder: Catalogue Raisonné (San Francisco, 1992), 288, no. 169; and Nadine Orenstein, The New Hollstein Dutch and Flemish Etchings, Engravings and Woodcuts, 1450 1700: Pieter Brueghel the Elder, ed. Manfred Sellink (Amsterdam, 2006), 166, A8. 7. Around the outside of the print the Flemish inscription reads: Die ghelt te gheuen heft
Page 6 of 8 onder hooghe en slechte, / En dat hij wat milt laet van sijnen schat, druijpen, Hy crijcht Offitien en comt t synen rechte, / Want elck en weet niet hoe hem sal in t gat crujpen (He who has money to give among high and low, / And that he liberally lets drop from his treasure, He receives offices and comes into his rights,/ Because not everyone is aware that he too shall crawl into the hole). On the lower back of the squatting man, two lines read in French: On ne sait comme entrer on veut, / Au trou de cil qui donner peut (One does not know how one wants to enter / The hole of he who can give). René van Bastelaer,The Prints of Peter Bruegel the Elder: Catalogue Raisonné (San Francisco, 1992), 288, no. 169. 8. The illustration shows a man holding a large piece of fabric fluttering in the air, while the inscription describes the flatterer as a person who changes direction depending on the wind. Een placebo ben ick ende also gesint / dat ick de huyck alom hanch naeden wint (A flatterer am I and so inclined / as the wind blows so blow I). M. Sellink,Bruegel: The Complete Paintings, Drawings and Prints (New York, 2007), 123. 9. The underlying inscription on this print reads: Tu caligas inflare meas, ego cudere nummos (You inflate my britches, I strike coins); see René van Bastelaer,The Prints of Peter Bruegel the Elder: Catalogue Raisonné (San Francisco, 1992), 229, no. 170. Provenance (Sale, Piasa, Drouot Richelieu, Paris, 17 December 2008, no. 37 [Salomon Lilian B. V., Amsterdam]). From whom acquired by the present owner in 2009. Exhibition History Ithaca, Cornell University, Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, An Eye for Detail: Dutch Painting from the Leiden Collection, 20 September 2014 21 June 2015 [lent by the present owner]. References Kapust, Daniel J. Flattery and the History of Political Thought: That Glib and Oily Art.
Page 7 of 8 Cambridge, 2018, cover illustration. Versions Related Prints 1. Hieronymus Wiericx, The Man with the Moneybag and His Flatterers, ca. 1558, engraving, 17.8 cm diameter, National Gallery, Stuttgart, Print Collection, inv. no. A 17425. 2. Jan Theodor de Bry (1528 96), after Hieronymus Wiericx, The Man with the Moneybag and His Flatterers, engraving, 10.7 x 8.4 cm, National Gallery of Art, Washington, Rosenwald Collection, inv. no. 1964.8.410. Published in Jan Theodor de Bry,Emblemata Secularia [Oppenheim, 1611]). Versions & Copies 1. Circle of Pieter Brueghel the Younger, A Proverb: He who holds the sack of gold will always have flatterers, oil on panel, oval, 18.2 cm diameter, current whereabouts unknown; formerly sale, Sotheby s, London, 12 July 2001, no. 118. Technical Summary The support, a single plank of circular, horizontally grained oak, is unthinned and uncradled and has a continuous round bevel along the panel circumference.[1] Hand-marbled paper adhered to the entire panel reverse makes it impossible to determine whether there are import stamps, panel maker s marks, or tool marks. No lead wax seal is visible in the X-radiograph or under the paper in raking light, there are no wooden shims, and the panel has not been previously prepared for dendrochronology. A light-colored, thinly and evenly applied ground is topped by paint applied in successive thin layers of transparent glazing, light over dark, with virtually no brushmarkings. The contours and folds of the central figure s vermilion shirt, the coins spilling from the sack, the miniature figures crawling along the foreground, and the foliage along the upper left of the composition are visible and slightly raised. The paint and ground do not spill over onto the thickness of the panel edges, but form a jagged edge along the entire outer panel circumference. A detailed, freely drawn line underdrawing is visible through the paint layer along the central figure s face and along the folds where the figure s stomach meets his upper thigh. Additional areas of underdrawing are visible through the figure s vermillion shirt and the miniature figures
Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org) Page 8 of 8 crawling along the foreground in infrared images captured at 780 1000 nanometers.[2] The painting has been signed in dark paint along the foreground in the lower right. The painting underwent minor conservation treatment in 2009. Technical Summary Endnotes 1. The characterization of the wood is based on visual examination only. 2. An infrared composite using an InGaS camera, which reaches further into the infrared spectrum, could provide additional details.